1. Impact of sinus rhythm maintenance on major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events after catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation: insights from AF frontier ablation registry
- Author
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K Usuda, Ken Okumura, Kazumasa Sonoda, Masa-aki Kawashiri, Hayato Tada, Teiichi Yamane, Ryuta Watanabe, Takeshi Kato, Yasuo Okumura, Yukihiko Momiyama, Hidemori Hayashi, Nobuhisa Hagiwara, Kazuhiro Satomi, Ikutaro Nakajima, Koichiro Ejima, Naoya Matsumoto, Shinya Suzuki, Masayuki Takamura, Wataru Shimizu, Yoshinao Yazaki, Takayuki Otsuka, Kyoko Soejima, Kenji Sakata, Michifumi Tokuda, Junjiroh Koyama, Masaru Arai, Kenshi Hayashi, Yu-ki Iwasaki, Yuji Watari, Noriko Nonoguchi, Soichiro Usui, Katsuaki Yokoyama, Mitsuru Takami, Shiro Nakahara, Hiroshi Furusho, Koji Kumagai, Koichi Nagashima, Kojiro Tanimoto, Tomoo Harada, Hidehira Fukaya, Masahide Harada, Toyonobu Tsuda, Akio Hirata, Hiroshi Hayashi, Satoru Niwa, Masato Murakami, Masaomi Kimura, and Masaru Inoue
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Catheter ablation ,Recurrence ,Internal medicine ,Atrial Fibrillation ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Humans ,Sinus rhythm ,Registries ,Stroke ,Aged ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,Atrial fibrillation ,Middle Aged ,Ablation ,medicine.disease ,Cardiac surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Catheter Ablation ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
The impact of catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF) on cardiovascular events and mortality is controversial. We investigated the impact of sinus rhythm maintenance on major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events after AF ablation from a Japanese multicenter cohort of AF ablation. We investigated 3326 consecutive patients (25.8% female, mean age 63.3 ± 10.3 years) who underwent catheter ablation for AF from the atrial fibrillation registry to follow the long-term outcomes and use of anti coagulants after ablation (AF frontier ablation registry). The primary endpoint was a composite of stroke, transient ischemic attack, cardiovascular events, and all-cause death. During a mean follow-up of 24.0 months, 2339 (70.3%) patients were free from AF after catheter ablation, and the primary composite endpoint occurred in 144 (4.3%) patients. The AF nonrecurrence group had a significantly lower incidence of the primary endpoint (1.8 per 100 person-years) compared with the AF recurrence group (3.0 per 100 person-years, p = 0.003). The multivariate analysis revealed that freedom from AF (hazard ratio 0.61, 95% confidence interval 0.44-0.86, p = 0.005) was independently associated with the incidence of the composite event. In the multicenter cohort of AF ablation, sinus rhythm maintenance after catheter ablation was independently associated with lower rates of major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events.
- Published
- 2021
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